When you want to advocate for your library, using data as evidence can strengthen your case. Knowing how your school compares ...
Our Off the record blog series will republish articles from the Off the Record magazine including stories about new ...
Take the reference to your local public library, and they can help you access the original item. For articles, include the source journal or serial, if shown above.
It's our last meeting and almost the end of the 2024 school year, so let's celebrate! We'll toast your successes and achievements from the year, have some fun and wrap up with our last kōrero about ...
Summer reading is an important, enjoyable activity that students can do during the summer holidays to help avoid the summer slide in reading levels. Join this webinar to hear ideas about how to get ...
For Taranaki Māori, 5 November 1881 is known as ‘Te Rā o te Pāhua’ or the ‘Day of Plunder’. The invasion of Parihaka — te pāhuatanga — involved 1500 armed constabulary and volunteers led by the Native ...
Description: Collection comprises family papers and photographs and material relating to the career of Sir Michael Myers. Also contains items relating to Lady Myers. Accompanying material - See ...
Join Dr Carwyn Jones as he examines the concept of ‘the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi’ — where they come from, what they are, and how they have been defined and applied in law and policy over ...
Rewa (also known as Manu) signed He Whakaputanga with his brothers Moka and Wharerahi. An important ally of Hongi Hika, Rewa was a well-regarded leader of Ngāpuhi’s northern alliance. His support for ...
At this month’s Friends of the Turnbull event, Dr Jennifer Ashton will discuss two former convicts, Charlotte Badger and George Bruce, who arrived at the Bay of Islands in 1806 and lived under the ...
Photographs of Clayton Station, a stone-built two-storied building with later additions. Included are two of sheep being guided through a dipping trough by men with long poles. Photographer ...
"The post-1945 migration to the cities by Māori transformed Aotearoa New Zealand forever. Before the Second World War 90% of Māori lived in rural tribal communities; by the mid-1970s almost 80% lived ...